F. Scott Fitzgerald's The Great Gatsby

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F. Scott Fitzgerald’s The Great Gatsby is an influential book written to warn society of the dangers of materialism. The book was written during the 1920’s, and was a call for change in American society. This was a time in America’s history in which people placed an emphasis on wealth and social status more than anything else. F. Scott Fitzgerald saw this as a problem in society and wrote The Great Gatsby to show this. The Great Gatsby attempted to caution society during the 1920’s, persuade society to make fundamental changes, and eventually the novel helped change the concept of American identity.
Fitzgerald’s novel was written to show the people of the 1920’s their obsession with wealth and exuberance was causing several problems in their society. In the book, everyone seems to be judged solely on their place in society and the amount of wealth they have obtained, rather than their character. Nobody seemed to know or care who Gatsby was, but everyone was willing to go to his huge, extravagant parties (Fitzgerald 49). Even when he died his own father seemed to be more int...

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